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March 08, 1938 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1938-03-08

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MA RO ;, 193$

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

] im. i
-
A

71

Edited and managed by students of the University of
Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of
'Studen*" Publications.
Pubshed every morning except Mondy during the
University year and Summer Session.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
use fo)r:republication of all news dispatches credited to
It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All
rights of republication of all other matter herein also
reserved.
Eern ved at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as
second class man matter.
Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier,
$4.00; by mail, $4.50.
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 193738
REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
NationalAdvertisingService, Inc
College Publishers Representative
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y.
CICAGO BOSTON LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO
Board of Editors
MANAGING EDITOR.............JOSEPH S. MATTES
ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............TUURE TENANDER
ASSOCIATE EDITOR............IRVING SILVERMAN
ASSOCIATE EDITOR ............ WILLIAM C SPALLER
ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............ROBERT P. WEEKS
WOMEN'S EDITOR................HELENDOUGLAS
SPORTS EDITOR .............. ....... IRVIN LISAGOR
Business Department
BUSINESS MANAGER ................ERNEST A. JONES
CREDIT MANAGER ....................DON WILSHER
ADVERTISINGMANAGER .... NORMAN B. STEINBERG
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.........BETTY DAVY
WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES
- -- - - . - I'
NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM J. ELVIN
It is important for society to avoid
the neglect of adults, but positively
dangerous for it to thwart the ambition
of youth to reform the world. Only the
schools which act on this belief are ed-.
ucational institutions in the best mean-
ing of the term.
Alexander G. Ruthven.
The editorials published in The Michigan
Daily are written by members of the Daily
staff and represent the views of the writers
only. -
Seattle
Election .. .
T HE CITIZENS of Seattle will elect
a non-partisan mayor today, but re-
gardless of their choice it is safe to predict that
factional domination, party loyalty and partisan
prejudices will continue to prostrate the mu-
nicipal government.
In the two decades before the accession to
power of Dave Beck, Seattle was in the vanguard
of the great reformist and progressive move-
ments that swept out of the American North-
west. It was the drive for efficient, honest
municipal government in Toledo, Cleveland, and
Seattle that led American reformers at the
turn of the century to designate the city as
the hope of democracy. In the twenties the
reformers crawled into their doghouses, pessi-
mistically certain that nothing could save
democracy any longer, and although the majority
of American cities reverted to their pre-muck-
raking status, Seattle persisted in maintaining its
well-balanced operation of city affairs.
Beck's rise to power through his control of the
powerful Teamster's 'Union changed that, of
course, and the city was treated to the unusual
sight of a labor rule that was fully as boss-ridden
and domineering as the best efforts of the
liagues, Pendergasts and Tammany Hall.
Oppression and mismanagement brings its own
reaction, and in Seattle the vigilante Order of
Cincinnatus has taken full advantage of the
community's impatience with Beck to present
its candidate as the very apostle of progressivism,
non-partisanship and good government. That
Arthur B. Langlie, the Order's candidate, will
mark no improvement over Boss Beck's gang
is evident from his unswerving, almost pas-
sionate, support of every reactionary proposal
in the City Council.
But most ludicrous of all, was the action by the
CIO. Presented with an unparalleled opportunity
to prove to the city that it could replace reaction,
whether of the Beck-AFL, or Langlie-Chamber of
Commerce variety, it nominated for the mayor-
alty a band-leader politician, who conducted

swingeroos in the street cars and kissed every
baby in Seattle in the primary campaign.
If labor intends to enter direct politics it will
have to present men of higher caliber than Dave
Beck or Vic Meyers. At any rate, whichever
of three are successful, the tired reformers will
yip exultantly from their doghouses, their skepti-
cism or the value of any reform forcibly streng-
thened today by the completed capitulation to
reaction of another American city.
Elliott Maraniss.
Three Stories
About Education . ..
o N FEB. 22 the Daily published figures
announcing that enrollment had in-
creased for the current semester making the
number of undergraduates well over 10,000; on
March 3 the Daily published figures announcing
that 600 students had been put on probation and
that 173 students in the literary college had been

second item manifests a tendency among state
universities to introduce a cathartic when a diet
would be much healthier. Students of obviously
mediocre ability are permitted to enter the
University, slow its operations down to their
speed, and then have themselves cast out in-
juring themselves after already having harmed
the University. This view is likewise not new
and received this criticism in the Daily more
than five years ago, "Between the lazy prodigals
and the indigent imbeciles, so much deadwood is
carried along in the class rooms that the truly
able and faithful student is largely cheated of
his chance to get ahead . . . We would rather see
a few students graduating with a lot of edu-
cation, than a lot with a little." Students who
have shown themselves inept at living the ac-
ademic life should be removed, but this removal
process should only be regarded as a secondary
measure after the introduction of higher entrance
requirements. This, we believe, would be of uni-
versal benefit: it would permit the faculty to
serve more effectively, it would mean better edu-
cation for the taxpayer's dollar, and it would
make it less difficult for the student to obtain
an education in Ann Arbor.
The last item manifests a point of view that
is capable of doing much for higher education.
It stands somewhat in between the two previous
items and points the via media that American
education might well pursue. Scholarships, such
as those made possible by the Rackham grant,
will increase the enrollment, but they will raise
the quality of the student body by adding to
it students of "moral character and good cit-
izenship . . . scholastic ability and intellectual
capacity and achievement."
The Daily would be pleased to be able to pub-
lish an item on tomorrow's front page that would
serve as a corrplary to the Rackham scholarship
item. It would say that the University had
raised the entrance requirements in an effort
to keep out poor students many of whom would
ultimately have had to leave anyway. If this
move were stringent enough Michigan would be
able to progres sand become more worthy of the
task of serving as an educational institution.
Robert Weeks.
Joseph S. Mattes. -
By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER
Little Symphony
That there is an Ann Arbor musical audience
other than the one that bombards visiting artists
with bursts of coughing and ill-timed applause
and that falls for shows of bombast and the-
atricalism, was proven Sunday night when an
eager public overflowed the Hussey Room and its
adjoining corridors at the Michigan League to
hear the season's second concert by the Uni-
versity of Michigan Little Symphony. The pro-
gram through which Thor Johnson led his
symphony-in-miniature was of the highest in-
terest both historically and for its intrinsic merit,
making its appeal through the purest artistic
channels, and was received with evident delight
by an audience whose size necessitates larger ac-
commodations for the Orchestra's future con-
certs.
Waiving the wasteful formality of a curtain-
raiser, Mr. Johnson at once went about his bus-
iness of bringing out unfamiliar but significant
music with a penetrating transcription of an early
classical trio sonata, No. 5 in C minor, by Jean
Paptiste Loelliet. Thereafter appeared the first
soloist of the evening, Andrew Ponder, playing a
B minor Concerto for Viola and Orchestra as-
cribed to Handel by its modern arranger, Henry
Casadesus. Whatever the origin of this work, it
is a beautiful piece of writing for a rarely-heard
solo instrument, and Mr. Ponder realized all of
its potentialities with a smooth and lovely tone,
admirable control of technique, and satisfying
musicianship.
An intermission for the orchestra ensued while
Alice Manderbach afforded a refreshing glimpse
into the music of the past with harpsichord solos
by the three great composers whose birth-year is
1685-Handel (Air Varie from the fifth clavecin
suite), Bach (preludes in D and E-flat minor

from the Well-Tempered Keyboard), and Do-
menico Scarlatti (sonatas in A, D, and G minor).
All of these works are a part of the modern piano
repertoire, but they took on a new light through
the soft twang of the older instrument and the
skill and understanding with which they were
played. The soulfully eloquent Adagio, Opus 3,
of Lekeu and Schubert's Fifth Symphony in B-
flat, a work expressly written for small orchestra
and full of Schubertian melodiousness and
charm, completed the program. By way of en-
core was heard Chopin's "Minute" Waltz ar-
ranged as a sort of Miniature flute concerto, with
John Krell giving a brilliant rendition of the
solo part,
While the playing of the orchestra was not
without occasional blemishes of precision and in-
tonation, these were worth noticing in a semi-
professional performance only because of the
high standards which the Little Symphony main-
tains, and certainly did not impair the beauty
and excellence of the concert as a whole. As an
ensemble, the group has never before performed
with such consistency or entered more sympa-
thetically into the conceptions of its leader.
Without breaking our wrist to pat ourselves on
the back, we cannot help pointing out Michigan's
good fortune in possessing such an artist as Thor
Johnson-who has not only the superior scholar-
ship and taste to build programs both historically
interesting and musically worth while, the unerr-
ing musical instinct necessary to their proper
interpretation, but also the technical ability as a
conductor to secure such a high degree of per-
fection from players of comparative inexperience,
and to imbue them with his own enthusiasm and
instinct for the music performed.

1-lf o eywood Broun
WASHINGTON, March 7.-I want to take a
chance and break an old personal tradition. I
purpose making a dogmatic statement which is
not wholly within the field of scientific research.
All right? Well, then, in my opinion, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt is the best
newspaperman who has ever
been the President of the
United States.
Now, of course, I haven't
een all the Presidents. Jef-
ferson and Lincoln were be-
fore my time, and Grant is
only a dim memory. Warren
Gamaliel Harding was him-
self an editor of sorts, and
Colonel Roosevelt ran a magazine.
But I still think Franklin excels in news sense.
I am moved to this opinion because I managed
to get into the White House press conference
yesterday disguised as a working newspaper man.
Some two hundred reporters, feature writers, itin-
erant novelists and busmen on a holiday were
present. Four questions were asked, taking ap-
proximately forty seconds, but the rest of the half
hour was taken over by the President. Certainly
no inquiring reporter would have been justified
in saying to the executive head of the nation, "So
you won't talk!"
* *' *
The President Answers Himself
And when the President was aone there were no
further interrogations. He had anticipated all
the pertinent queries and answered them himself.
His role was that of both the hare and the
hounds. It was a little like a severe cross-exam-f
ination of Walter Winchell by Mr. Winchell.
To be sure, Franklin Delano Roosevelt has some
aces in the hole when he meets the press and
pretends to let his hair down in the absence of
any official record. He can't be heckled. That
has long been the custom, and to me the tradi-
tion seems sound enough.
Even from a journalistic standpoint I think it
would be improper for any correspondent to say,
if only to a Republican President, "Now, don't
try to equivocate or ride out on a wisecrack. An-
swer my question 'Yes' or 'No,' and let's have no.
more stalling." It isn't dne, but it has been tried
during the life of the present administration.
A girl from a radical newspaper tried on several
occasions to dust off Mr. Roosevelt when he
seemed intent on flying away from the specific
subject. She was and is both intelligent and very
personable, but the President in his very best
early Dutch manner brushed her aside, and she
has since been scrunched out of the picture.
It is my impression that her own publication
felt it might be better to sneak up on the Presi-
dent of the United States rather than bait him.
The rules as to what is for background and color
and what is for quotation have always puzzled
me.
* * *
Suggests A 'Lead-All'
The line is sharply drawn. And so I hope that
I am not leaving myself open to excommunica-
tion by saying that the President began his con-
ference by telling the assembled reporters the
manner in which he would deal with the press
conference story if he were covering it. My recol-
lection is that he suggested that the fifteenth
Psalm might well go in as "Lead al." He also
made some fugitive inquiry as to the release date
on that piece of enduring prose. Such a remark
on my part is pure swank.
I haven't the faintest idea of what is in the
fifteenth Psalm. The only one I know is the1
twenty-third. But, in any case, I would not lead
either with my chin or Scripture.
Still, I must admit that Franklin Delano
Roosevelt gave out what sounded to me like an
excellent column. As to its news value, I woul
not care to risk an opinion. I admired his per-
formance, and yet it left me uneasy. If the
man in the White House is capable of turning
out such first-rate copy in impromptu discussion
it may mean the end of jobs for columnists.

Here Comas 1940
Launching a Presidential boom is a delicate
business. Has it been timed right? Will it catch
on? Will it displease some influential people and
arouse opposition? Such questions as these are
inevitably in the air as the backers of Paul V.
McNutt, High Commissioner to the Philippine
Commonwealth and former governor of Indiana,
hold forth with expansive hospitality in intro-
ducing him to Washington.
Starting two full years and more before the
nominating convention that is to choose a Demo-
cratic banner carrier for 1940 means a long time
to sustain the campaign which Governor Mc-
Nutt's friends hope will land him in the White
House. Many a boom has been started too soon
and so gone flat, though the pre-1932 activity of
James A. Farley for then Gov. Franklin D. Roose-
velt is a precedent in favor of the long range
strategy.
A pre-eminent question now is how this same
Mr. Roosevelt and his entourage will respond to
aspirations of the handsome gentleman from the
Pasig and the Wabash. They have already seemed
to respond rather sharply by punitive transfer of
a ranking Army Air Corps officer for flying Com-
missioner McNutt from San Fancisco to Denver in
order to catch up with his speaking schedule. Nor
has the White House secretariat betrayed any
tensely eager expectancy of the apparently vol-
untary "report" which Commissioner McNutt in-
tends to make to the Chief Executive on affairs
in the Far East.
All in all, one is moved to wonder a little un-
comfortably if the apparent displeasure in Ad-

THEATRE
By NORMAN KIELL
"Stage DMo'
The "picketing" by two members of
Play Production of the movie version
of "Stage Door" is certainly a sign
that the legitimate theatre is healthy
and kicking, to say the least. For
years, the iconoclasts have been say-
ing that the theatre is dead and the
little theatre of yesterday just ain't
what it used to be.
The feature part of the "picketing"
was the spirit in which everything
was carried along. The two pickets,
,artorially dressed in opera cloaks of
1890 vintage, rammed top-hats,
pince-nez, and beards, and in con-
trast to their ironic apparel, carry-
ing placards bearing the hand-paint-
ed inscriptions, "Movies Come in
Cans-See the Real McCoy!" and
"Unfair to the Legitimate Stage!"-
the two pickets entertained the long
queus waiting to see the movie.
It was all good fun. They adver-
tised Play Production's presentation
of the show in its original form with
such mad antics and pranks as would
befit the Marx Brothers. For a time
it looked as though the management
of the theatre would put them on his
pay-roll just to entertain his long
line of standees regularly.
Of course the whole thing was a
swell publicity stunt cooked up by
Play Production's publicity man.
!Whether or not it did more business
for the movie of the show remains
yet to be seen. Certainly it did no
harm. Perhaps the ubiquitous con-
troversy of movie versus legitimate
stage will be answered by this week's
events.
At any rate, by this time we all
know that the movie is as different
from the show as a C grade on a
bluebook is to an A, respectively.
What the screen writers did to Edna
Ferber's and George Kaufman's or-
iginal show was to keep the title, take
the characters and plot, shake them
up in a neat cocktail jar, add some
sentimental truck, plus a stroke of
genius in casting-Miss Hepburn and
Miss Rogers, and there you are.
We do not begrudge the movie their
success. Far be it. More power to
them to turn out really good cellu-
loids, but at least if they are going
to transcribe an original stage show
to the sound tracks, let them keep
four-fifths of the material intact.
Calling a horse a cow is manifest mis-
representation; calling a movie by the
name of its first birth when it even-
tually turns out to be illegitimate is
likewise gross misrepresentation. This
is our only argument.
But then too, we can consider the
ethical side of the question in regard
to the Butterfield chain bringing the
movie to Ann Arbor just prior to the
stage showing. Of course, nothing can
be done about it. It is just a prime ex-
ample of our 20th century business
tactics, and the Butterfield people are
doing themselves proud by develop
ing them in a proving ground such as1
Ann Arbor, where youth is supposedly

TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1938
VOL. XLVIII. No. 112
Student Tea: President and Mrs.
Ruthven will be at home to students
Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m.
Notice Regarding Elevators in
University Buildings: Any depart-
ment receiving a request for data,
concerning elevators to be filed with
the State Labor and Industry De-
partment will please refer the same
to the Business Office.
Shirley W. Smith.
Exemptions from Saturday Classes:
All students in the College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts who were
granted provisional exemption from
Saturday classes, or those having
changed their courses since registra-
tion must file letters supporting their
claims before Friday, March 11.
Walter A. Reichart, chairman, 300
U.H.
Students of the College of Litera-
ture, Science, and the Arts: A meet-
ing will be held on Tuesday, March 8,1
at 4:15 p.m. in Room 206 Dentistry
Building for students in the College
of Literature, Science, and the Arts
and others interested in future work
in dentistry. Dean R. W. Bunting of
the School of Dentistry will be avail-
able for consultation, to give infor-
mation concerning the nature of and
preparation for the profession of den-
istry.
Seniors of the College of Engineer-
ing: Call at Room 412 West Engineer-
ing Building at once for your Draw-
ing I, II and III Plates.
First Mortgage Loans: The Univer-
sity has a limited amount of funds
to loan on modern well-located Ann
Arbor residential prop rty. Interest
at current rates. Apply Investment
Office, Room 100; South Wing,
University Hall.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive noti, to all memo'rs of the
University. Copy received at the office of the Ass::jitant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday,

Science Auditorium. Some Post-War
Economic Tendencies.
Wednesday, March 9. 4:15 Room
C, Haven Hall. Mercantilism: Theory
and Practice, I.
Thursday, March 10. 4:15 Room C,
Haven -Hall. Mercantilism: Theory
and Practice, II
Friday, March 11. 4:15 Room C,
Haven Hall. Economic History of
Sweden, I.
Monday, March 14. 4:15 Room C,
Haven Hall. Economic History of
Sweden, II.
The public is cordially invited.
Franch Lecture: Prof. Warner F.
Patterson will give the sixth lecture
on the Cercle Francais program
"Vincent Voiture, poete precieux,"
Wednesday, March 9, at 4:15 p.m.,
Room 103, Romance Language Bldg.
Tickets for the series of lectures may
be procured at the door.
Events Today
Botanical Journal Club: Tonight at
7:30 p.m. 'Room N.S. 1139.
Reports by: Eugene Atkinson
Cerro Cuadrado Petrified Forest.
Harmon Dunham: Principles and
methods of tree ring analysis. Waldo
S. Glock.
Jean Bertram: American Creta-
ceous ferns of the genus Tempskya.
Brown and Read.
Roy Chatters: Structure of secon-
dary walls in woods.
Chairman: Professor C. A. Arnold.
Deutscher Verein: Meeting tonight
at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League.
Mr. Hanns Berg, exchange student
from Munich will speak on: "Sport
in Deutschland." Everybody in-
terested is invited to attend.
Graduate Education Club, March
meeting will be held in the Univer-
sity Elementary School Library at
4:30 p.m. today. The meeting will
follow the Elementary School Staff

Tuesday, 1:15-1:30' p.m. Detroiters meeting. "Reports from Atlantic
at the University of Michigan (over City" will be made by Dr. Olson,
WMBC). Johnston, Carrothers, Fraser and
3:00-3:30 p.m. Forestry and Land others. A large turn out is looked for.
Utilization Series. Topic: Preparing

Michigan Lands for Work and Play.j
Lee R. Schoenmann, Charles Lath-
rop Pack, Professor of Wild Land
Utilization (WJR).
Students of the College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts: A meet-
ing will be held on Thursday, March
10, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 313 W.
Medical Building for students in the
College of Literature, Science and the
Arts and others interested in future
work in pharmacy. Professor H. B.
Lewis, Director of the College of
Pharmacy, will be available for con-
sultation, to give information con-
cerning the nature of and prepara-
tion for the profession. The next
meeting in the vocational series will

trained in the American Way. I be addressed by Dr. W. W. Bishop,
But then again, perhaps we are get- Librarian of the University, on Tues-
ting too serious about the whole day, March 15.
affair. We should be truly grateful.
It has prcvided one of the most stim- Academi Notices
ulating theatrical weeks the Univer-
sity has seen in years. When the De- Geography I. A siApplementary ex-
troit Free Press comes to our fair amination for those students who
town seeking the news, why then, why were absent from the final examina-
then, Play Production's press agent tion in February will be held in Room
certainly has attained his purpose. 19, A.H. on Tuesday, March 8, at 2
p.m.
Geology 11 and 12 make-up final
FO R U M examinations will be given Friday,
March 11 from 2 until 5 in 2054 N.S.
They will be given at no other time.

Atz Open Letter
To the Editor:
We are submitting for publication
the enclosed letter addressed to
President Roosevelt. We would like
to have it printed, not because we
think it is a good letter, although
we do, but because it becomes pro-
gressively clearer that for all our
frantic attempts we as students and
ordinary citizens cannot do much
more than be each one voice of pub-
lic opinion.
Of course "the President will never
see the letter." That is why we have
sent it to the Daily. The President,
or whoever matters in this case, will
see the letter, if it comes not only
from two of us but from two dozen or
kwe don't expect it) two hundred,
that is, if it expresses itself as public
opinion, and that of a public that is
sufficiently concerned to go to the1
trouble of writing about it.
The Hon. Franklin D. Roosevelt,
President of the United States; j
Washington, D.C.
Sir:
As citizens of the United States we
wish to enter our protest against the
proposed expenditure for a great in-
crease in the United States Navy.
Were such an increase accompanied
by a constructive program for inter-
national cooperation for the preser-
vation of peace, it might conceivab)?
have some justification. But where
there is no such concerted program
in mind, it becomes sheer economic
waste.
In your now famous Chicago speech
you indicated that you had some suchj
international cooperation in view.
Now, almost four months later, it is
clear that these intentions will not

German Make-up Examination:
The departmental make-up exami-
nations in German 1, 2, and 31 will
be given on Friday, March 11, from
2-5:00 p.m. in Room 304 U.H. All
students absent from the examina-
tion in these courses must take- this
make-up, as no other opportunity
will be afforded.
English 32, Mr. Litzenberg's sec-
tions, assignment for Wednesday
"Twelfth Night."
Economics 53: Make-up final ex-
amination: This exam will be given
Friday, March 11, at 3 o'clock in
Room 207 Ec. Please report to me be-
fore this time to determine eligibility
to take this exam.
Shorey Peterson.
Psychology 33 make-up will be held
Thursday at 1:00 p.m., Room 3126,
Natural Science Bldg.
Chemistry 3, lecture section I,
make-up final examination will be
held in Room 464, Chemistry Build-
ing, Wednesday, March 9, 1 to 4 p.m.
Lectures
University Lectures: Professor Eli
Heckscher, President of the Econ-
omics Institute of Sweden, will give
a series of lectures on Economic His-
tory under the joint auspices of the
Departments of Economics and His-
tory. The schedule is as follows:
Tuesday, March 8. 4:15 Natural
that war is inevitable, but also that
our participation in it is inevitable.
This we are not willing to admt. Nor
aen we willin #n rhmi fnfli in

German Club meeting at the Mich-
igan League today at 8 p.m. All in-
terested are invited to come.
Mathematics Club will meet at 8
p:m. tonight in 3201 Angell Hall.
Prof. Ben Dushnik will speak on
"Continuous Linear Orders."
The Book Shelf and Stage Section
of the Faculty Women's Club will
meet at the home of Mrs. R. K. Mc-
Alpine, 926 Sylvan St., on Tuesday
at 2:45 p.m. Mrs. L. R. Dice is as-
sisting hostess.
Bibliophiles: The Bibliophiles sec-
tion of the Faculty Women's Club will
meet today at 2:30 p.m., at the home
of Mrs. Lars Thomassen, 2115 Wood-
side Road.
Chemical'and Metallurgical En-
gineering Grad uate Luncheon will be
held today at 12:15 in Room 3201
East Engineering Building. The
speaker will be George P. McCallum.
Michigan Dames style show tonight
at 8:15, Grand Rapids Room at the
League. Especially invited are the
wives of students aid internes who
are not already members. Initiation
of new members will be March 22.
Members may invite a guest and their
husband.
Junior Girls Play: There will be a
meeting of the program committee
at 4 p.m. today at the League. All
members should attend.
Wyvern: There will be a meeting
at 5 p.m. today. It is important that
all members attend.
A new series of golf lessons will be
started today. The class meets at
4:30 for a lecture. This series of les-
sons extends for three weeks and is
open to both students and faculty.
Women's Swimming Class: The
7:30 p.m. swimming class for women
will not meet on Tuesday evening,
March 8.
Women's Fencing Club: There will
be a meeting'today at 4:15 in Barbour
Gymnasium to practice for the com-
ing tournament.
Christian Science Organization:
8:15 p.m. League Chapel. Students,
alumni and faculty invited to attend
the services.
Michiganensian Editorial and Busi-
ness Staff Tryouts: All freshmen and
sophomores are to be present at Dey's
Studio on Tuesday, March 8, at 4:15
p.m., for the staff picture. Everyone
please be prompt.
The Michigan Anti-War Commit-
tee will meet at Lane Hall at 7:30
Tuesday evening. All those who are
interested are invited to attend.
Plans for the remainder of the se-
mester will be discussed.
1 '- m *- ~ - £

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